The Art Of Seduction. Katherine O' NealЧитать онлайн книгу.
it came back to him. Paris. The Grand Hotel. The gold suite. And, finally, the extraordinary day he’d just experienced. Just when he thought he’d seen it all and the rest of his life was going to be routine, a day like this one came along.
He’d been asked to come here to have a look at the Caldwell paintings and the phenomenon that was building around them. Frankly, he hadn’t expected much, so it had all taken him by surprise.
He still wasn’t sure what to make of it. But as he lay there, reliving the experience, he was even more sure that, buried in this phenomenon, was an enormous opportunity for him.
Then he thought of the woman and felt himself stir once again. She, too, had taken him by surprise. Christ Almighty! He’d just intended to lay on a little charm. But the situation had exploded into one of the most intense carnal experiences of his life. Something about her brought out the beast in him, stirring feelings he couldn’t even define. For someone who liked to be in control of every situation, she was a perilous proposition. He’d have to be careful with this one.
Had his overture been an unwise move? In retrospect, probably so. Why had he made it, then? Obviously, because she said she was leaving and he had to prevent her from slipping out of his fingers. Still, she’d been more than he’d bargained for. Once again, he cautioned himself to be careful.
Well, here I am. What am I going to do now?
Some decisions had to be made.
For some time he remained there, propped against the pillows, letting things play out in his mind, beating down erotic thoughts that kept popping up about the delicious interlude in the coach, knowing there was no way he was going to walk away from this.
Suddenly, the spark of an idea hit him. An ambitious idea. An outrageous idea. So ambitious, so outrageous that he couldn’t take it seriously, but…he couldn’t let go. It would take patience, meticulous planning, all his skill and dedication. But maybe…just maybe…
Slipping into a robe, he felt such a surge of creative satisfaction that he knew he was hooked.
He walked the long path to the double doors and threw them wide, opening up the bedroom to the sitting room beyond. A sliver of light stealing through a crack in the curtains helped him see the shapes and shadows of the tasteful furnishings of the suite. He yanked back the drapes, letting in the golden glow of the lighted façade of l’Opéra across the street. His fourth-floor French doors put him in line with an exhilarating view of the gilded angels that graced the rooftop of Garnier’s palace, as if they were soaring before his eyes.
He looked at them for a moment, these muses that seemed to have been placed there just for him on this auspicious night. Then, going to the bar and pouring himself a brandy, he pulled a chair to the window and sat facing it.
He stayed there for the rest of the night, sipping the brandy slowly as his eyes caressed the view and his mind began to unfold his exhilarating plan.
Mason awoke the next morning feeling strangely happy and at one with the world. It was such an unusual feeling that, for a moment, she couldn’t figure out why. Then she remembered. The show…the riot over her paintings…and him…
Richard Garrett.
She stretched her limbs, smiling dreamily, feeling the sweet afterglow flood through her. Snuggling deeper into the feathery folds of the bed, she luxuriated in the majesty of her good fortune.
Her discretely luxurious surroundings served to reinforce the dreamlike sensation. Falconier’s suite was a large, high-ceilinged space at the front of the block-long building consisting of two levels: a comfortable sitting room with a mezzanine bedchamber above overlooking it. Striped wallpaper of cranberry and plum created a backdrop for the maroon and hunter green furnishings. Pictures of celebrated race horses adorned the walls.
But for Mason, the most extraordinary aspect of it was the fact that her phenomenal streak of good fortune had placed her directly across the narrow Rue Scribe from the Grand Hotel and Richard Garrett.
As if it was meant to be.
She heard the key turn in the door downstairs and sat up in bed. Then she heard Lisette’s voice, “Thank you, mon cher.”
A young male voice answered, “But it is my pleasure, Mademoiselle Lisette. I have delighted in your artistry many times at the circus.”
“Aren’t you sweet,” Lisette said. “Here’s something for your trouble.”
“Oh, no, Mademoiselle. I could never accept anything from you. Meeting you is honor enough.”
“I’m up here,” Mason called when she heard the door close.
“Still in bed?” After a moment, Lisette appeared coming up the spiral stairwell. She looked at Mason, lying in bed with her hands above her head, bathed in morning sunlight streaming through the windows, a satisfied smile on her face.
“I’m a woman of leisure,” Mason sighed.
“Where did you go yesterday? I looked for you everywhere. Then I had to go to work.”
Mason stretched again, savoring the feel of her body against the cool sheets. “I was swept away by Apollo.”
“What Apollo was that?”
“Didn’t you see me with him? The tall Englishman? I don’t know how you could miss him. He made every other man there look like Toulouse-Lautrec.”
Lisette blew a dangling strand of hair out of her eyes. “I only saw Dargelos trying to make my life miserable, as usual. But tell me.” She flopped down on the bed beside Mason. “What man is this?”
“Like I said. A god.”
“But who is he?”
“His name is Richard Garrett.”
“And who is Richard Garrett?”
“Who knows? Who cares? He has something to do with the art world. But, Lisette, he loves my paintings. He understands them.”
Lisette turned over onto her stomach, peering closely at her friend. “I do not think that is what put the smile on your face, chérie.”
“No! He ravaged me! It was wonderful.”
“Ravaged you?” Lisette tucked her chin into her hands. “Tell me!”
Mason shifted up in the bed, too excited to lay prone any longer. “You remember what it was like when I first got to Paris? When I wanted to taste the Bohemian life…those conceited painters you set me up with? Well…it was nothing like that. Richard Garrett swept in like a knight on his charger and showed me what I’ve been missing. And here’s the really strange part. That night in the river, when I thought I was going to drown…I thought about this man I’d never known. It was as if I was wishing for him to appear. And then, out of the blue…he does. It’s as if fate heard all my wishes that night and decided to grant all of them to me in one fell swoop. Here, pinch me so I know I’m not dreaming.”
Lisette was laughing. “He was that good, eh?”
“It’s not just that. Well, he was, yes. He was astonishing. But it’s more than that. He believes in me! You should hear the things he says, the way he talks about me. When I listen to him, when I see myself through his eyes, it’s as if all the things I thought were wrong with me disappear. He makes me feel that everything that’s happened to me happened for a reason, to make me what I am. That what I am may be worthy, after all; someone I could learn to love. No one has ever made me feel that way before. It’s such an amazing feeling, Lisette, that I almost don’t know what to do with it.”
“I’ve never seen you like this. You’re falling in love with this man.”
“Am I?” Mason tried the thought out in her mind and felt it answered in the sudden flitting of her heart. “I suppose I am.”
“Chérie, I am happy for you. But you do have a teensy little